Noah's Ark Cafe at the Marlow Park playground, near
Dunedin's St Kilda beach, looks set to be demolished. Photo
by Peter McIntosh.
God may have commanded the construction of Noah's Ark,
but it appears only divine intervention can save Dunedin's
version of the vessel.
The 64-year-old building which houses Noah's Ark Cafe at the
Marlow Park playground, near St Kilda beach, looks set to be
demolished at the Dunedin City Council's instruction.
Council community and recreation services manager Mick Reece
said consultants had confirmed the building - built in 1945 -
was "a waste of time", with much work required to bring it up
to a safe and code-compliant state.
The old cafe had been empty since October, when the most
recent tenants quit the site after a dispute over rent linked
to complaints about the closure of nearby John Wilson Ocean
Dr to vehicle traffic, he said.
An assessment of the building had since found it was in
"below average to poor condition", and upgrading or replacing
the building would cost at least $1.46 million, a council
report said.
Mr Reece said there seemed little point in spending the money
when the council was yet to complete long-term planning for
the control of erosion in the area.
"The engineers are saying that structurally the building is
not good . . . it's grotty and would need substantial work
done to it to come up to code compliance for the public," he
said.
"It's had its day - I'm sure we can do better."
Instead, the report by council parks and reserves team leader
Martin Thompson recommended removing the cafe and an
adjoining dwelling, while retaining the existing toilet block
for use by beach-goers.
A recent council public toilet review had identified new
toilets at Marlow Park as a priority, but no funding had yet
been budgeted for the work.
The cost was estimated at $270,000 in 2006.
Demolishing the cafe and dwelling would cost an estimated
$60,000, but a food stall on nearby Kettle Park would be made
available for use by mobile vendors on a trial basis over
summer.
Mr Reece said mobile vendors were becoming "more common" in
the city, and seemed a good option for providing food and
drinks in the popular beach area.
The report would be considered by the council's community
development committee on Tuesday.
chris.morris@odt.co.nz
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